MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING
In Sicily is a town called Messina, which is the scene of a
curious storm in a teacup that raged several hundred years ago.
It began with sunshine. Don Pedro, Prince of Arragon, in
Spain, had gained so complete a victory over his foes that the very land whence
they came is forgotten. Feeling happy and playful after the fatigues of war,
Don Pedro came for a holiday to Messina, and in his suite were his stepbrother
Don John and two young Italian lords, Benedick and Claudio.
Benedick was a merry chatterbox, who had determined to live
a bachelor. Claudio, on the other hand, no sooner arrived at Messina than he
fell in love with Hero, the daughter of Leonato, Governor of Messina.
One July day, a perfumer called Borachio was burning dried
lavender in a musty room in Leonato's house, when the sound of conversation
floated through the open window.
"Give me your candid opinion of Hero," Claudio,
asked, and Borachio settled himself for comfortable listening.
"Too short and brown for praise," was Benedick's
reply; "but alter her color or height, and you spoil her."
"In my eyes she is the sweetest of women," said
Claudio.
"Not in mine," retorted Benedick, "and I have
no need for glasses. She is like the last day of December compared with the
first of May if you set her beside her cousin. Unfortunately, the Lady Beatrice
is a fury."
Beatrice was Leonato's niece. She amused herself by saying
witty and severe things about Benedick, who called her Dear Lady Disdain. She
was wont to say that she was born under a dancing star, and could not therefore
be dull.
Claudio and Benedick were still talking when Don Pedro came
up and said good-humoredly, "Well, gentlemen, what's the secret?"
"I am longing," answered Benedick, "for your
Grace to command me to tell."
"I charge you, then, on your allegiance to tell
me," said Don Pedro, falling in with his humor.
"I can be as dumb as a mute," apologized Benedick
to Claudio, "but his Grace commands my speech." To Don Pedro he said,
"Claudio is in love with Hero, Leonato's short daughter."
Don Pedro was pleased, for he admired Hero and was fond of
Claudio. When Benedick had departed, he said to Claudio, "Be steadfast in
your love for Hero, and I will help you to win her. To-night her father gives a
masquerade, and I will pretend I am Claudio, and tell her how Claudio loves
her, and if she be pleased, I will go to her father and ask his consent to your
union."
Most men like to do their own wooing, but if you fall in
love with a Governor's only daughter, you are fortunate if you can trust a
prince to plead for you.
Claudio then was fortunate, but he was unfortunate as well,
for he had an enemy who was outwardly a friend. This enemy was Don Pedro's
stepbrother Don John, who was jealous of Claudio because Don Pedro preferred
him to Don John.
It was to Don John that Borachio came with the interesting
conversation which he had overheard.
"I shall have some fun at that masquerade myself,"
said Don John when Borachio ceased speaking.
On the night of the masquerade, Don Pedro, masked and
pretending he was Claudio, asked Hero if he might walk with her.
They moved away together, and Don John went up to Claudio
and said, "Signor Benedick, I believe?" "The same," fibbed
Claudio.
"I should be much obliged then," said Don John,
"if you would use your influence with my brother to cure him of his love
for Hero. She is beneath him in rank."
"How do you know he loves her?" inquired Claudio.
"I heard him swear his affection," was the reply,
and Borachio chimed in with, "So did I too."
Claudio was then left to himself, and his thought was that
his Prince had betrayed him. "Farewell, Hero," he muttered; "I
was a fool to trust to an agent."
Meanwhile Beatrice and Benedick (who was masked) were having
a brisk exchange of opinions.
"Did Benedick ever make you laugh?" asked she.
"Who is Benedick?" he inquired.
"A Prince's jester," replied Beatrice, and she
spoke so sharply that "I would not marry her," he declared
afterwards, "if her estate were the Garden of Eden."
But the principal speaker at the masquerade was neither
Beatrice nor Benedick. It was Don Pedro, who carried out his plan to the
letter, and brought the light back to Claudio's face in a twinkling, by
appearing before him with Leonato and Hero, and saying, "Claudio, when
would you like to go to church?"
"To-morrow," was the prompt answer. "Time
goes on crutches till I marry Hero."
"Give her a week, my dear son," said Leonato, and
Claudio's heart thumped with joy.
"And now," said the amiable Don Pedro, "we
must find a wife for Signor Benedick. It is a task for Hercules."
"I will help you," said Leonato, "if I have
to sit up ten nights."
Then Hero spoke. "I will do what I can, my lord, to
find a good husband for Beatrice."
Thus, with happy laughter, ended the masquerade which had
given Claudio a lesson for nothing.
Borachio cheered up Don John by laying a plan before him
with which he was confident he could persuade both Claudio and Don Pedro that
Hero was a fickle girl who had two strings to her bow. Don John agreed to this
plan of hate.
Don Pedro, on the other hand, had devised a cunning plan of
love. "If," he said to Leonato, "we pretend, when Beatrice is
near enough to overhear us, that Benedick is pining for her love, she will pity
him, see his good qualities, and love him. And if, when Benedick thinks we
don't know he is listening, we say how sad it is that the beautiful Beatrice
should be in love with a heartless scoffer like Benedick, he will certainly be
on his knees before her in a week or less."
So one day, when Benedick was reading in a summer-house,
Claudio sat down outside it with Leonato, and said, "Your daughter told me
something about a letter she wrote."
"Letter!" exclaimed Leonato. "She will get up
twenty times in the night and write goodness knows what. But once Hero peeped,
and saw the words 'Benedick and Beatrice' on the sheet, and then Beatrice tore
it up."
"Hero told me," said Claudio, "that she
cried, 'O sweet Benedick!'"
Benedick was touched to the core by this improbable story,
which he was vain enough to believe. "She is fair and good," he said
to himself. "I must not seem proud. I feel that I love her. People will
laugh, of course; but their paper bullets will do me no harm."
At this moment Beatrice came to the summerhouse, and said,
"Against my will, I have come to tell you that dinner is ready."
"Fair Beatrice, I thank you," said Benedick.
"I took no more pains to come than you take pains to
thank me," was the rejoinder, intended to freeze him.
But it did not freeze him. It warmed him. The meaning he
squeezed out of her rude speech was that she was delighted to come to him.
Hero, who had undertaken the task of melting the heart of
Beatrice, took no trouble to seek an occasion. She simply said to her maid
Margaret one day, "Run into the parlor and whisper to Beatrice that Ursula
and I are talking about her in the orchard."
Having said this, she felt as sure that Beatrice would
overhear what was meant for her ears as if she had made an appointment with her
cousin.
In the orchard was a bower, screened from the sun by
honeysuckles, and Beatrice entered it a few minutes after Margaret had gone on
her errand.
"But are you sure," asked Ursula, who was one of
Hero's attendants, "that Benedick loves Beatrice so devotedly?"
"So say the Prince and my betrothed," replied
Hero, "and they wished me to tell her, but I said, 'No! Let Benedick get over
it.'"
"Why did you say that?"
"Because Beatrice is unbearably proud. Her eyes sparkle
with disdain and scorn. She is too conceited to love. I should not like to see
her making game of poor Benedick's love. I would rather see Benedick waste away
like a covered fire."
"I don't agree with you," said Ursula. "I
think your cousin is too clear-sighted not to see the merits of Benedick."
"He is the one man in Italy, except Claudio," said Hero.
The talkers then left the orchard, and Beatrice, excited and
tender, stepped out of the summer-house, saying to herself, "Poor dear
Benedick, be true to me, and your love shall tame this wild heart of
mine."
We now return to the plan of hate.
The night before the day fixed for Claudio's wedding, Don
John entered a room in which Don Pedro and Claudio were conversing, and asked
Claudio if he intended to be married to-morrow.
"You know he does!" said Don Pedro.
"He may know differently," said Don John,
"when he has seen what I will show him if he will follow me."
They followed him into the garden; and they saw a lady
leaning out of Hero's window talking love to Borachio.
Claudio thought the lady was Hero, and said, "I will
shame her for it to-morrow!" Don Pedro thought she was Hero, too; but she
was not Hero; she was Margaret.
Don John chuckled noiselessly when Claudio and Don Pedro
quitted the garden; he gave Borachio a purse containing a thousand ducats.
The money made Borachio feel very gay, and when he was
walking in the street with his friend Conrade, he boasted of his wealth and the
giver, and told what he had done.
A watchman overheard them, and thought that a man who had
been paid a thousand ducats for villainy was worth taking in charge. He
therefore arrested Borachio and Conrade, who spent the rest of the night in
prison.
Before noon of the next day half the aristocrats in Messina
were at church. Hero thought it was her wedding day, and she was there in her
wedding dress, no cloud on her pretty face or in her frank and shining eyes.
The priest was Friar Francis.
Turning to Claudio, he said, "You come hither, my lord,
to marry this lady?" "No!" contradicted Claudio.
Leonato thought he was quibbling over grammar. "You
should have said, Friar," said he, "'You come to be married to
her.'"
Friar Francis turned to Hero. "Lady," he said,
"you come hither to be married to this Count?" "I do,"
replied Hero.
"If either of you know any impediment to this marriage,
I charge you to utter it," said the Friar.
"Do you know of any, Hero?" asked Claudio.
"None," said she.
"Know you of any, Count?" demanded the Friar.
"I dare reply for him, 'None,'" said Leonato.
Claudio exclaimed bitterly, "O! what will not men dare
say! Father," he continued, "will you give me your daughter?"
"As freely," replied Leonato, "as God gave her to me."
"And what can I give you," asked Claudio,
"which is worthy of this gift?" "Nothing," said Don Pedro,
"unless you give the gift back to the giver."
"Sweet Prince, you teach me," said Claudio.
"There, Leonato, take her back."
These brutal words were followed by others which flew from
Claudio, Don Pedro and Don John.
The church seemed no longer sacred. Hero took her own part
as long as she could, then she swooned. All her persecutors left the church,
except her father, who was befooled by the accusations against her, and cried,
"Hence from her! Let her die!"
But Friar Francis saw Hero blameless with his clear eyes
that probed the soul. "She is innocent," he said; "a thousand
signs have told me so."
Hero revived under his kind gaze. Her father, flurried and
angry, knew not what to think, and the Friar said, "They have left her as
one dead with shame. Let us pretend that she is dead until the truth is
declared, and slander turns to remorse."
"The Friar advises well," said Benedick. Then Hero
was led away into a retreat, and Beatrice and Benedick remained alone in the
church.
Benedick knew she had been weeping bitterly and long.
"Surely I do believe your fair cousin is wronged," he said. She still
wept.
"Is it not strange," asked Benedick, gently,
"that I love nothing in the world as well as you?"
"It were as possible for me to say I loved nothing as
well as you," said Beatrice, "but I do not say it. I am sorry for my
cousin."
"Tell me what to do for her," said Benedick.
"Kill Claudio."
"Ha! not for the wide world," said Benedick.
"Your refusal kills me," said Beatrice. "Farewell."
"Enough! I will challenge him," cried Benedick.
During this scene Borachio and Conrade were in prison. There
they were examined by a constable called Dogberry.
The watchman gave evidence to the effect that Borachio had
said that he had received a thousand ducats for conspiring against Hero.
Leonato was not present at this examination, but he was
nevertheless now thoroughly convinced Of Hero's innocence. He played the part
of bereaved father very well, and when Don Pedro and Claudio called on him in a
friendly way, he said to the Italian, "You have slandered my child to
death, and I challenge you to combat."
"I cannot fight an old man," said Claudio.
"You could kill a girl," sneered Leonato, and
Claudio crimsoned.
Hot words grew from hot words, and both Don Pedro and
Claudio were feeling scorched when Leonato left the room and Benedick entered.
"The old man," said Claudio, "was like to
have snapped my nose off."
"You are a villain!" said Benedick, shortly.
"Fight me when and with what weapon you please, or I call you a
coward."
Claudio was astounded, but said, "I'll meet you. Nobody
shall say I can't carve a calf's head."
Benedick smiled, and as it was time for Don Pedro to receive
officials, the Prince sat down in a chair of state and prepared his mind for
justice.
The door soon opened to admit Dogberry and his prisoners.
"What offence," said Don Pedro, "are these
men charged with?"
Borachio thought the moment a happy one for making a clean
breast of it. He laid the whole blame on Don John, who had disappeared.
"The lady Hero being dead," he said, "I desire nothing but the
reward of a murderer."
Claudio heard with anguish and deep repentance.
Upon the re-entrance of Leonato be said to him, "This
slave makes clear your daughter's innocence. Choose your revenge.
"Leonato," said Don Pedro,